Remote Sensing (Sep 2016)

An Inter-Comparison Study of Multi- and DBS Lidar Measurements in Complex Terrain

  • Lukas Pauscher,
  • Nikola Vasiljevic,
  • Doron Callies,
  • Guillaume Lea,
  • Jakob Mann,
  • Tobias Klaas,
  • Julian Hieronimus,
  • Julia Gottschall,
  • Annedore Schwesig,
  • Martin Kühn,
  • Michael Courtney

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs8090782
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. 782

Abstract

Read online

Wind measurements using classical profiling lidars suffer from systematic measurement errors in complex terrain. Moreover, their ability to measure turbulence quantities is unsatisfactory for wind-energy applications. This paper presents results from a measurement campaign during which multiple WindScanners were focused on one point next to a reference mast in complex terrain. This multi-lidar (ML) technique is also compared to a profiling lidar using the Doppler beam swinging (DBS) method. First- and second-order statistics of the radial wind velocities from the individual instruments and the horizontal wind components of several ML combinations are analysed in comparison to sonic anemometry and DBS measurements. The results for the wind speed show significantly reduced scatter and directional error for the ML method in comparison to the DBS lidar. The analysis of the second-order statistics also reveals a significantly better correlation for the ML technique than for the DBS lidar, when compared to the sonic. However, the probe volume averaging of the lidars leads to an attenuation of the turbulence at high wave numbers. Also the configuration (i.e., angles) of the WindScanners in the ML method seems to be more important for turbulence measurements. In summary, the results clearly show the advantages of the ML technique in complex terrain and indicate that it has the potential to achieve significantly higher accuracy in measuring turbulence quantities for wind-energy applications than classical profiling lidars.

Keywords